Yes, your facial features show you are not Siberian so much as Northern Chinese. |
According to American scholars Hendon Harris (chinesediscoveramerica.com) and Ken Campbell (lastwilderness.com), the Americas are "Fu Sang," the mythical land to the east of China, not the nearby islands of Japan.
Fu Sang (also called Fusang) was a wondrous place of exotic people, foods, and customs. American historian Edward Vining (An inglorious Columbus; or, Evidence that Hwui Shan and a party of Buddhist monks from Afghanistan discovered America in the fifth century, AD, 1885) knew this by 1885 and we had never heard?
Mysterious genetic origins of Native Americans tracked to China
Where did we come from? Aztlán |
People from the north coast of China [an easy trip along the coasts all along the way as Edward Payson Vining (1885) and Rick Fields (2022) showed] were among the earliest humans to arrive in the Americas, arriving in two independent migrations during and after the last Ice Age, according to a new genomics research.
We're related by blood! |
The kelp highway theory is the polar opposite of the old "ice-free corridor" route.
The findings suggest that, in addition to the previously identified ancestral sources of Native Americans in Siberia, northern coastal China acted as a genetic reservoir that contributed to the gene pool.
CONCLUSION
So I'm Mexican-Chinese? |
The last paragraph of it reads: "Who will now revive the Hwui Shan controversy and gainsay the conclusion of Dr. Charles E. Chapman, the last American historian to write on the subject? ...Fusang was in America, presumably in Mexico... The evidence that it was...is almost overwhelming."
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